While the Lake Underhill Bridge looks like a cable stayed bridge, it is not.
The bridge towers and stay cables are nothing more than decorative elements,
making this a faux cable stayed bridge. Despite not being a true cable
stayed bridge, this structure is still interesting and visually exciting.

The Lake Underhill Bridge carries highway SR-408 tollway traffic over a small
lake that is located just south of the Orlando Executive Airport on the
northeast side of the city. The bridge first opened in 1973 as two parallel
concrete girder bridges carrying 3 lanes of traffic on each span. Traffic
on the 408 tollway increased dramatically in the 1990s, and the road was
very congested following the turn of the century. The city and state
wished to expand the tollway.

The SR-408 tollway was planned in several segments. The segment that
includes the Lake Underhill Bridge was 1 mile in length and was budgeted
for $77-million of the $500-million total for the SR-408 project. The
plan was to widen the bridge from 6 lanes to 12 lanes, with 5 through lanes
and one auxiliary lanes on each bridge span. Construction began in 2007, and
the new traffic lanes were opened in November of 2009.

A controversy erupted when it was learned that $10-million of the $77-million
budget for this project was set aside for amenities such as a pedestrian
bridge, sound walls, lighting, and aesthetic elements. In particular, the
two faux cable stayed towers were widely criticized as a waste of the
$1.5-million price tag. Highway planners countered that this bridge
would serve as a gateway for travelers entering Orlando from the east, and
it was important to have a signature structure as part of the highway.
Others who were in favor of the faux cable stay design thought that the
50-foot towers were far too short to be a signature design element.

In the end, the towers went up, the bridge is finished, traffic is moving
again, and the city of Orlando has its eastern city gateway on the SR-408
tollway. The bridge turned out very nice, and decorative features really
dress up what would otherwise be a very boring concrete girder bridge.

The photo above is looking northwest towards the south face of the Lake
Underhill Bridge. The Orlando city downtown is visible in the distance
beyond the west end of the structure. The east bridge tower is in the
foreground. The bridge features 21 concrete girder spans, each about
82-feet long. A few spans are a bit shorter given that the two parallel
bridges have slightly different overall lengths. The vantage point for
this photo is a fishing pier located in Lake Underhill Park.

These two photos are views looking northwest towards the east bridge
tower. The vantage point is a fishing pier located in a city park on the
south side of Lake Underhill. The photo above is a little wider view, while
the photo below is a closer view of the bridge tower.

The photo above is a telephone view of the bridge tower at the west end of
the Lake Underhill Bridge. The photo below is looking directly north towards
the east bridge tower. The first of the 21 over water spans is visible in
this view.

The photo above is looking northwest towards the south face of the Lake
Underhill Bridge. The east bridge tower is at the right side of the photo.
The photo below is looking northeast towards the south face of the bridge,
with the west bridge tower on the left side of the photo.

The photo below is a closer view of the bridge tower at the west end of the
Lake Underhill Bridge. The photo below is the first of three photos showing
a typical bridge crossing heading westbound on the highway SR-408 tollway.
This photo is entering the east end of the westbound bridge span. The
east bridge tower is located in the gap between the two parallel bridge
spans.

These two photos continue our crossing of the Lake Underhill Bridge heading
westbound. The photo above is a view from mid-span. The photo below is
just exiting the west end of the structure with the west bridge tower
located in the gap between the two parallel bridge spans.